Exhibiting at trade shows, conferences, or pop-up shows is a great way to promote your product to a targeted audience. You’re able to interact with your customers or prospects, and you get to see what your competition is up to. But, it can be expensive when compared to email or social media marketing. You need to account for your trade show booth, exhibitor fees, the packing, set up, dismantling, and transportation of your exhibit, plus travel costs. And, you’re investing time. Oh, and yes, your feet will be killing you by the end of the day, guaranteed!
Follow along with our accompanying Trade Show Guide and our Pre, During & Post Event Checklist!
Years of experience have taught me the keys to ensuring the total investment you make pays off.
- Set Your Goals: What do you hope to achieve from this show? Set up a specific set of metrics (e.g., 50 leads, $500 in sales, 2 wholesaler orders) upfront so you can assess at the end whether you’ll do it again next year.
- Decide What to Display: This is one of your most important decisions leading up to the event. Your choices include: New items or collections, your most popular items, your most unique items, your highest margin items, the most seasonally relevant items, or the highest inventoried items you have. A focus and a theme are important to anchor your exhibit. Otherwise, it can come across as a cluttered mess.
- Grab Their Attention: Ensure there is a visual appeal to your exhibit. Don’t forget about the lighting, sound, and any interactive elements you may have. Consider having a place for conversation, and don’t forget to bring a select few promotional materials.
- Deliver Your Sales Story: This isn’t the time to be modest about your product! Make every conversation count. Practice giving a 30-second introduction to pull the customer in. It should include:
- The problem you solve for them
- How it’s better than the competition’s product
- The benefits of your product or service
- Note, if you are selling directly to the consumer, they may also be interested in your return/refund policy and how they can re-order from you in the future.
- Note, if you’re selling to a distributor or wholesaler, there are many more questions that you’ll need to be sure you can answer to be successful. Remember, they need to believe that their customers will buy. For example:
- That you have unique, “hot selling” product(s)
- That you can deliver a sufficient quantity of product
- That it’s easy to order from you + always available customer service
- That you provide them with display and promotional materials
- That you’ll recognize them in your marketing (e.g., your site) as a place to buy
- That your terms and conditions will net them a sufficient margin
- Capture Contacts & Follow-up: Your first priority is to get a sale, and your second priority is to get as many qualified names as possible. Use a customized landing page and sign up form on a tablet to capture each person’s contact info (a good old clip board works too). Also, ask questions to determine their specific needs and where in the buying cycle they seem to be. This allows you to be more targeted in your messaging when you do the follow up communication.
- Take photos of your trade show booth with customers around it. Post these on your social pages & website (get permission first, and consider using a model release form.) These can also be used for Public Relations activities.
- Analyze Your Results: Compare your actual results against your goals. Overall, give this investment a thumbs up or thumbs down. Recap any feedback or objections from the people that visited your trade show booth. Revise your sale story if required. Think about what the competition is doing and what it means for your business or product strategy.
- And, one more thing. Walk around the show. Don’t miss the opportunity to see what the competition is up to. Plus, if you have time, set up some “meet and greet” time with press or other influential attendees.
We have more tips and examples about how to make your pop-up show or trade show booth successful in our free Trade Show Guide and our Pre, During & Post Event Checklist!
Trade Show Guide
Exhibiting at trade shows, conferences, or pop-up shows is a great way to promote your product to a targeted audience. We share tips and examples about how to make your pop-up show or trade show booth successful in this guide.
Miriam Vializ-Briggs is a marketing consultant with 25+ years of marketing strategy and execution experience, garnered as an executive at IBM, American Express and Kraft General Foods. She has created solutions and marketing strategies in a number of industries including banking, biotech, packaged goods, energy, healthcare, industrial, insurance, restaurants, retail, and travel & entertainment.
Great advice!
I would add “listen more than you talk”, especially early on. When facing a visitor, let him tell you more about himself, what he needs, why and what he has been using / selling so far.
Such information will help you narrow down the type of products you need to present and the USPs you must focus on. Instead of giving him a full-scale boring presentation, you will now be able to focus precisely on what he cares about, increasing your chances of conversion while reducing the time spent. Great, isn’t it?
But your next step is as important, if not more – capture your leads precisely and quickly. By doing so you increase your potential of pushing this visitor further down the sales funnel.
Good luck!
Absolutely! Wonderful tip, Julien. It’s so important to listen first to the needs of others first. Sometimes it involves “reading between the lines” but this information is crucial! 🙂
The small company I work for sells clothing online and relies on trade shows and conventions to bring in new customers. We wanted to bring more heavier pieces such as back drops, wooden clothing racks, etc. but it’s difficult to find shipping solutions when we are traveling far distances. Any tips?
Hi Courtney and Happy New Year! Great question and I completely understand the issue. Shipping, custom duties, and pilferage take a big chunk out of the budget and profits. It is extremely stressful and can ruin your whole show presence if materials you were counting on to be there, don’t show up. It has happened to me more than I can count!
Here are some broad suggestions:
(1) Assuming there will be other vendors at these events, tap into the organizer and/or fellow vendors for local sources. Outside of your branded company materials (and I’d keep most of this to electronic information that you can display on your laptop/iPad versus printed literature that needs shipping) and the clothing lines you are showing, I would look to find in market sources for everything else.
(2) If your company attended the same convention last year, tap into your email list from there to remind attendees about your presence this year as well. Direct them to where your booth/table will be located. In fact, I’d recommend you set up specific appointments to leverage these relationships. If it is a new venue for your company, then try to see if the organizer can provide you with a email list that you can use to announce your participation. In addition, use your social media platforms to promote the company and the collection ahead of time. The idea is to avoid having heavy and expensive back drops and banners to call attention to your presence. Let there be a pre-built interest to come to you on the show floor.
Net, I’d avoid shipping heavy and bulky items at all costs. The items you mention should be available in most markets. Bring to the trade events only what you can personally carry and spend your time marketing your presence there and why attendees should come check you out.
Hope these tips are of some use to you. We wish you all the very best in 2017!
Great Tips! You have a lot of great ideas!
Thanks so much Lauren! Wishing you much success in all of your trade show work this year.